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Everything posted by David Andrews
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In the color autopsy photo shown, the frontal right hairline wound looks like it has already been dissected, with angular flaps retracted. The photo may show a midpoint in the autopsy between dissection of the front wound and any addressing of the rear wound. We're seeing discrepancies between this set of color photos, the "Stare of Death" wound photo, and the officially released autopsy photos.
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Peter Dale Scott on "Why was JFK Killed?"
David Andrews replied to Douglas Caddy's topic in JFK Assassination Debate
I've always looked on the JFKA as a centrist act, where interests coalesced, only some of them politically right-wing. -
I've always been confounded that, at Parkland, no note was made of a blow-out detaching skull from the temporal and front parietal areas, resembling the "flap" in Zapruder and shown in the autopsy photograph taken from the rear. (The only autopsy photo to show the "flap"; the right side is intact in others.) You'd believe that brain tissue loss there would have been recorded at Parkland, and that the sight would have been visual proof of mortality to ER staff, thus memorable. What was up at Parkland? Is the "flap" in any witness recollections?
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Jada knew the SOB was going to shoot him
David Andrews replied to Tony Krome's topic in JFK Assassination Debate
I'm thinking that driving a car accident victim to a hospital was, by law or custom, a Texas form of due diligence meant to ward off Hit-and-Run charges if no policeman was summoned. Imagine thousands of miles of unpoliced, rural Texas highway - you'd be expected to take someone you hit out there to a hospital. "Nick" would have been a stand-in for Jada at the hospital, and a witness that the driver saw after the victim's welfare. He might have slipped the vic a couple twenties on the way. -
"A far mean streak of independence brought on by negleck" (neglect). Did Oz write that about himself, or did Howard Hunt or David Atlee Phillips ghostwrite it, casting Oz in the resourceful loner role, the World Historical Individual shaded somewhere between Davy Crockett and Charles Starkweather? I've read those guys. I'm not sure they're were that expressive as fictionneurs.
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Ergotism, or ergot poisoning producing hallucinogenic effects, was well known in Middle Ages Europe and in other periods and places, determined by deduction (and experiment?) in the days before lab analysis. That's one reason why Sandoz chemists turned up their noses at testing grain: they were ergot snobs, they'd been around the block with rye ergot and now were holding instead The Real Junk (as Lux Interior once put it). Maybe Wisner aerosolized it over France figuring that, historically, the source would be pegged at natural grain corruption. Among the medieval Euro-maladies blamed on Ergotism were religious mania, witch persecution, pilgrimages of flagellantes, etc. If sex were involved - it was the devil's work. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6640538/ "Ergotism is thought to have occurred in ancient times (de Costa, 2002; van Dongen and de Groot, 1995), but had its peak level in Europe in the Middle Ages when the disease affected many thousands of people. A monastic order especially cared for the afflicted, the patron saint of which was St. Anthony (Fig. 1). The malady itself was known at that time as ignis sacer (holy fire), or St. Anthony's Fire, because of the burning sensations in the limbs (Matossian, 1989). "The first well‐documented epidemic of ergotism was in ad 944–945, when about 20,000 people living in Paris and the Aquitane region of France, at that time about one‐half of the population, died of the effects of ergot poisoning (Matossian, 1989; Schiff, 2006). Matossian (1989) also speculates that the slow recovery after the plague epidemics in Europe in the 14th century was at least partly caused by reduced fertility as a result of ergot toxifications. Ergot poisoning is nowadays widely believed to have influenced social history, such as the witch trials of Salem and in Norway during the 17th century (Alm, 2003; Caporael, 1976) and even mystic religious movements (Packer, 1998). Already in the late 16th and beginning of the 17th centuries, observations of the link between ergot‐contaminated rye and disease were made (Bauer, 1973), but it was not until the 19th century that the mycologist Louis Rene Tulasne revealed the correlation between infected rye and ergotism (Tulasne, 1853). This led to increased efforts to reduce ergot contamination in rye (for example, by flotation of seeds to remove sclerotia); therefore the occurrence of larger epidemics became rare. The most recent epidemic in Germany occurred in 1879–1881; however, there have been more recent epidemics in parts of Russia (1926–1927) (Barger, 1931; Eadie, 2003) and Ethiopia (1977–1978) (Urga et al., 2002), and, in India, outbreaks continued until the late 20th century (Tulpule and Bhat, 1978)."
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A belated Merry Christmas to all, with fondness for some who are no longer here. Let's encourage peace on earth.
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Henry Kissinger: The Passing of Doctor Death
David Andrews replied to James DiEugenio's topic in JFK Assassination Debate
Are you damn sure he's dead? -
The Assassination, the CIA, Nixon and Ford
David Andrews replied to Gil Jesus's topic in JFK Assassination Debate
I have the Morley, but haven't opened it yet. Nixon strikes me as a guilty trickster without an institution behind him (as fit his self-designed loner image), while Helms possessed the institution. Who wins this Batman-vs.-Superman fight? -
The Assassination, the CIA, Nixon and Ford
David Andrews replied to Gil Jesus's topic in JFK Assassination Debate
I've wondered if Nixon's own paranoia of dirty tricks, including fear of his own assassination, brought on his examination of what CIA had been up to, and the adversarial climate created brought on Watergate. -
"The other thing I should add is I was always of the school of thought that there probably was a conspiracy to kill President Kennedy," Knott told Fox Digital. "I'm no longer in that camp. I believe that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone and that the evidence against Oswald is pretty damning. So I'm not of the school of thought that buys into some conspiracy." Everybody made sure that got into the last para. Would have made it the lede, if they could.
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Anniversary article in The Guardian today: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/nov/18/jfk-assassination-dallas-legacy-political-conspiracy-extremism "Dubbed ‘city of hate’ after the 1963 killing, the Texas metropolis has largely moved on but the forces that brought death to Dealey Plaza are arguably more prevalent than ever "
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Huh? Anyone Remember This? Arson at TSBD?
David Andrews replied to Benjamin Cole's topic in JFK Assassination Debate
Also to help efface assassination landmarks from the plaza. Or to get rid of a building that had become a white elephant for tenant rentals? (You know - like the WTC.) -
A new look at paper bags, curtain rods, and Oswald
David Andrews replied to Greg Doudna's topic in JFK Assassination Debate
What do we make of the bag addressed to the wrong Oswald location, held at the post office and discovered after his death? Did someone really need to connect him with a rifle bag? Could he have ordered it at a gun shop? Some discussion of bags, rods, and the Frazier-Randle family in this video. Brings up issues if not solving them to everyone's satisfaction: Oswald: What I'm really lookin' for is something to carry this thing in, but I can't afford a case. Gunsmith: Well, I'm all outta paper sacks. Like me to mail you one? Oswald: Sure. Here's two bits and a fake address. -
Douglas Caddys 1975 dinner with E. Howard Hunt
David Andrews replied to Gerry Down's topic in JFK Assassination Debate
I suspect that Hunt deadpanning "The alien presence" meant, at best, "I can't tell you." At worst, it meant...something that may be used as a barometer for the temper of his deathbed confession. Both messages are for an audience larger than the recipients. -
Morley and Nagle on Mexico City
David Andrews replied to James DiEugenio's topic in JFK Assassination Debate
Thanks. Larry. -
Morley and Nagle on Mexico City
David Andrews replied to James DiEugenio's topic in JFK Assassination Debate
Larry, not contradicting, but did the agents who ID'd Oswald ID him correctly? From photos and direct observation, or from rumor and disinfo (false hotel/transportation records and Oz-name dropping by the "subject")? In the absence of photos, can we ever know? It would seem that those photos would be used to bolster the WCR, did they exist.